A leader of the group opposed to marijuana legalization said Monday that it will request a recount of votes on the statewide ballot question that passed by a narrow margin last week.

Such a recount, involving more than 757,000 ballots, could take a month to conduct and cost the state $500,000, the Secretary of State’s Office said Monday.

Scott Gagnon, left, campaign manager for No on 1, says his group Mainers Protecting Our Youth and Communities has received emails and phone calls "encouraging the coalition to stand firm" and try to overturn the pot legalization law unofficially passed by Maine voters. Brianna Soukup/Staff Photographer

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Mainers Protecting Our Youth and Communities, which opposed Question 1 on the Nov. 8 ballot, is circulating petitions to collect the 100 signatures needed to request a recount. Scott Gagnon, campaign manager for the group, said the petitions will be turned in to the Secretary of State’s Office before the deadline at 5 p.m. Wednesday.

The unofficial tally shows 381,060 votes in support of Question 1 and 376,658 opposed, a margin of 4,402 votes, less than 1 percent, according to unofficial results collected from communities across the state by the Associated Press and Portland Press Herald. The totals include about 4,000 absentee ballots received by the state from members of the military and Mainers living overseas.

Maine was one of four states that voted last week to legalize recreational marijuana for adults 21 and older. Eight states and Washington, D.C., now have voted to legalize a recreational cannabis market.

In addition to a possible recount, Gov. Paul LePage has said he might challenge the referendum results. LePage said after the election that he will ask President-elect Donald Trump if his administration will enforce federal law against marijuana possession, before he decides whether to challenge the referendum vote.

The referendum proposal, if it stands, will make it legal for adults at least 21 years old to possess as much as 2.5 ounces of marijuana. The citizen initiative would become effective 30 days after the governor proclaims the results of the election, or roughly 60 days after the election. Marijuana stores and social clubs would likely not open for a year or so to give the state time to set up licensing and regulatory rules. Individual communities also may consider zoning rules for retail stores and social clubs, or ban them outright.

The narrow vote margin on Election Day does not trigger an automatic recount. But campaigns can initiate a recount with a formal request.

If the margin of difference is less than 1.5 percentage points – as is the case in the marijuana vote – a recount is paid for entirely by the state. In cases where the margin is greater than 1.5 points, the party seeking the recount must pay between $500 and $5,000.

Meanwhile, two legislative candidates also have requested recounts, the Secretary of State’s Office said Monday.

Keith Cornelio has requested a recount in House District 74, which includes part of Livermore and all of Livermore Falls and Jay. Cornelio, a Republican, finished 61 votes behind Christina Riley, a Democrat.

Benjamin Twitchell has requested a recount in House District 78, which includes Winslow and part of Benton. Twitchell, a Republican, finished 140 votes behind Catherine Nadeau, a Democrat.

Neither recount had been scheduled as of Monday afternoon. Legislative recounts are much more common, and far less costly, than statewide recounts.

Secretary of State Matt Dunlap estimated that a recount on the statewide marijuana referendum would cost his office and the Maine State Police about $500,000. State troopers would have to travel to each of the state’s 503 municipalities to pick up the sealed ballot boxes to deliver to the Secretary of State’s Office for the manual recount. A Question 1 recount could take about four weeks.

Gagnon, the campaign manager for No on 1, said the coalition has received emails, phone calls and social media messages from voters who oppose legalization.

“These Maine voters are encouraging the coalition to stand firm, as the stakes are incredibly high for Maine’s youth and Maine’s medical marijuana program,” Gagnon said last week. “It is our duty to exercise all rights available to ensure that the final results are a fair and accurate representation of the will of all Mainers.”

David Boyer, campaign manager for Yes on 1, said the campaign sees a recount as a waste because the margin of votes now numbers in the thousands.

“The people of Maine have spoken and they have voted ‘yes’ to make marijuana legal, as have millions of other Americans across the country,” he said. “Just as keeping marijuana illegal has been a waste of taxpayer dollars, we think this recount will be a waste of time and taxpayer dollars.”

CORRECTION: This story was updated at 8:30 a.m. on Nov. 15, 2016 to clarify when the citizen initiative would go into effect.

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